This case comes to this court on certified questions from the Georgia Court of Appeals concerning the relationship between a recent decision of this court,
Cherry v. Coast House,
In the order certifying its questions to this court, the Court of Appeals indicated that it believes that these three cases leave unclear “in a case in which the appellant seeks or has sought to act in the capacity of co-counsel, . . . whether his efforts are entitled to judicial recognition and consideration pursuant to [the 1983 Constitution],” certification order, p. 5. In its certified questions the Court of Appeals asks this court to address this issue. We shall do so later in this opinion, after we summarize the constitutional and interpretational history that underlies the questions.
The 1983 Ga. Const., Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XII, provides that “[n]o *37 person shall be deprived of the right to prosecute or defend, either in person or by an attorney, that person’s own cause in any of the courts of this state.” The comparable paragraph of the 1976 Const., Art. I, Sec. I, Par. IX, provided that “[n]o person shall be deprived of the right to prosecute or defend his own cause in any of the courts of this State, in person, by attorney, or both.” (Emphasis supplied.)
In
Burney v. State,
The constitutional paragraph applied in
Burney
was subsequently altered during the creation of the 1983 Constitution by, inter alia, deletion of the term “or both.” The meaning of this deletion was addressed in
Jones v. State,
In
Cargill,
supra,
In
Cherry,
supra,
In September 1988, the Court of Appeals certified its questions to us regarding the relationship between Cherry, on the one hand, and Cargill and Nelms on the other. The text of the questions is as follows:
1. Did the decision in Cherry v. Coast House, supra, implicitly overrule earlier Supreme Court decisions which had interpreted the 1983 Constitutional provision as a “right of choice” provision, so that the controlling construction of the 1983 constitutional provision is now consistent with that given to the former 1976 constitutional provision in Burney v. State, supra?
2. Or, is the decision in Cherry v. Coast House, supra, distinguishable from the earlier Supreme Court decisions, so that the existing 1983 constitutional provision is construed as a “right of choice” provision under certain circumstances, but as a “right to act as co-counsel” provision in other circumstances? 3
After careful review of the cases in question, we find that
Cherry
is not in conflict with
Nelms
and
Cargill,
4
because it is distinguishable on its facts. The distinguishing factor in
Cherry
is that the party who sought to act as his own co-counsel was himself a lawyer. Although there was some risk that allowing him to do so would disrupt the proceedings, see
Cherry,
supra,
Accordingly, we hold that under the 1983 Ga. Const., Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XII, and
Cargill
and Cherry,
5
a layperson does not have the right to represent himself and also be represented by an attorney, but a lawyer does have such a right, subject to the authority of the trial court to limit the exercise of that right in order “to insure the orderly disposition of matters before it . . . ,”
Cherry,
supra,
The first certified question of the Court of Appeals is hereby answered in the negative, and the second question is answered in the positive.
First certified question answered in the negative, and second certified question answered in the positive.
Notes
We also held that the Sixth Amendment does not confer on a criminal defendant “the hybrid right to simultaneously represent himself and be represented by counsel.”
Cargill,
supra,
Cargill
did not cite another Court of Appeals case,
Sanborn v. State,
After the Court of Appeals certified these questions, this court published an opinion in the case of
Hance v. Kemp,
As a result of changes in the Georgia Constitution, a criminal defendant in Georgia “ ‘no longer has the right to represent himself and also be represented by an attorney, i.e., the right to act as co-counsel.’ [Cit.]” Cargill, supra,255 Ga. at 623 .
And Hance. See fn. 3 of this opinion.
And consistent with Nelms and Hance.
